Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations, 49836-49843 [2010-20238]
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49836
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 157 / Monday, August 16, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
6044, 6045, 6049, 6050A, 6050N, or
6050W whether or not the amount of the
reportable payment is less than the
amount for which an information return
is required. If tax is withheld under
section 3406, the statement must show
the amount of the payment withheld
upon;
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PART 301—PROCEDURE AND
ADMINISTRATION
Par. 12. The authority citation for part
301 continues to read in part as follows:
■
returns required to be filed for calendar
years beginning after December 31,
2010), generally the recipient copy),
*
*
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Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
Approved: August 3, 2010.
Michael Mundaca,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax
Policy).
[FR Doc. 2010–20200 Filed 8–13–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 13. Section 301.6721–1(g) is
amended by:
■ 1. Removing the language ‘‘or’’ at the
end of paragraph (g)(3)(xii).
■ 2. Redesignating paragraphs
(g)(3)(viii), (g)(3)(ix), (g)(3)(x), (g)(3)(xi),
(g)(3)(xii) and (g)(3)(xiii) as (g)(3)(ix),
(g)(3)(x), (g)(3)(xi), (g)(3)(xii), (g)(3)(xiii)
and (g)(3)(xiv).
■ 3. Adding the language ‘‘or’’ at the end
of newly designated paragraph
(g)(3)(xiii).
■ 4. Adding new paragraph (g)(3)(viii).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 301.6721–1 Failure to file correct
information returns.
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(g)* * *
(3)* * *
(viii) Section 6050W (relating to
information returns with respect to
payments made in settlement of
payment card and third party network
transactions (effective for information
returns required to be filed for calendar
years beginning after December 31,
2010)),
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■ Par. 14. Section 301.6722–1 is
amended by:
■ 1. Removing the language ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (d)(2)(xviii).
■ 2. Redesignating paragraphs
(d)(2)(xvi), (d)(2)(xvii), (d)(2)(xviii) and
(d)(2)(xix) as (d)(2)(xvii), (d)(2)(xviii),
(d)(2)(xix) and (d)(2)(xx).
■ 3. Adding new paragraph (d)(2)(xvi).
■ 4. Adding the language ‘‘and’’ at the
end of the newly designated paragraph
(d)(2)(xix).
The addition reads as follows:
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§ 301.6722–1 Failure to furnish correct
payee statements.
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(d)* * *
(2)* * *
(xvi) Section 6050W (relating to
information returns with respect to
payments made in settlement of
payment card and third party network
transactions (effective for information
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Part 561
Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations
Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (‘‘OFAC’’) is promulgating the
Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations,
to implement provisions of the
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Divestment Act of
2010, which require the Secretary of the
Treasury to prescribe certain
regulations. These regulations also
implement other related provisions of
the aforementioned legislation.
DATES: Effective date: August 16, 2010.
Comment date: You may submit
comments on or before October 15,
2010.
ADDRESSES: These regulations are not
subject to the provisions of Executive
Order 12866 and the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) that
require notice of proposed rulemaking,
opportunity for public participation,
and a delayed effective date.
Nevertheless, OFAC welcomes the
submission of comments on this final
rule. Please note that the submission of
comments will not affect the final rule’s
effective date, nor will OFAC be
required to respond to the comments
submitted or to amend or republish this
final rule. You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
Fax: Attn: Request for Comments
(Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations) Office of Prgm Policy &
Implementation, 202/622–1657.
SUMMARY:
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Mail: Attn: Request for Comments
(Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations): Office of Prgm Policy &
Implementation, Office of Foreign
Assets Control, Department of the
Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20220.
Instructions: All submissions received
must be in writing and include the
agency name and the Federal Register
Doc. Number that appears at the end of
this document. OFAC will not accept
comments accompanied by a request
that all or a part of the submission be
treated confidentially because of its
business proprietary nature or for any
other reason. Comments received will
be made available to the public via
regulations.gov or upon request, without
change and including any personal
information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Assistant Director for Compliance,
Outreach & Implementation, tel.: 202/
622–2490, Assistant Director for
Licensing, tel.: 202/622–2480, Assistant
Director for Policy, tel.: 202/622–4855,
Office of Foreign Assets Control, or
Chief Counsel (Foreign Assets Control),
tel.: 202/622–2410, Office of the General
Counsel, Department of the Treasury
(not toll free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document and additional
information concerning OFAC are
available from OFAC’s Web site
(https://www.treas.gov/ofac). Certain
general information pertaining to
OFAC’s sanctions programs also is
available via facsimile through a 24hour fax-on-demand service, tel.: 202/
622–0077.
Background
On July 1, 2010, the President signed
into law the Comprehensive Iran
Sanctions, Accountability, and
Divestment Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
195) (‘‘CISADA’’). In signing CISADA,
the President stated that this act builds
upon the recently adopted United
Nations Security Council Resolution
(‘‘UNSCR’’) 1929 (2010) and its strong
foundation for new multilateral
sanctions and provides a powerful tool
against Iran’s development of nuclear
weapons and support of terrorism. The
President pointed out that the
Government of Iran, for years, has
violated its commitments under the
NPT and defied United Nations Security
Council resolutions calling on Iran to
cease its proliferation-related activities
and imposing sanctions for Iran’s failure
to do so.
The President went on to describe
UNSCR 1929 as providing the toughest
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 157 / Monday, August 16, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
and most comprehensive multilateral
sanctions against the Government of
Iran to date. UNSCR 1929, among other
things, calls upon States to prohibit in
their territories the opening of new
branches, subsidiaries, or representative
offices of Iranian banks; to prohibit
Iranian banks from establishing or
maintaining correspondent
relationships with banks in their
jurisdiction; and to prevent the
provision of financial services,
including insurance or re-insurance, if
they have reasonable grounds to believe
that these activities could contribute to
Iran’s proliferation-sensitive nuclear
activities or the development of nuclear
weapon delivery systems. CISADA
builds upon UNSCR 1929 by
strengthening existing sanctions under
the Iran Sanctions Act of 1996 (Pub. L.
104–172, 50 U.S.C. 1701 note) and
adding new mandatory sanctions on
foreign financial institutions that
facilitate Iran’s proliferation-related
activities or support for terrorism or that
do significant business with Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
(‘‘IRGC’’) or certain other blocked
persons.
Specifically, section 104(c) of
CISADA requires the Secretary of the
Treasury, not later than 90 days after the
date of CISADA’s enactment, to
prescribe regulations to prohibit, or
impose strict conditions on, the opening
or maintaining in the United States of a
correspondent account or a payablethrough account for a foreign financial
institution that the Secretary finds
knowingly: (1) Facilitates the efforts of
the Government of Iran, including the
IRGC or its agents or affiliates, to
acquire or develop weapons of mass
destruction (‘‘WMD’’) or delivery
systems for WMD or to provide support
for foreign terrorist organizations or acts
of international terrorism; (2) facilitates
the activities of a person subject to
financial sanctions pursuant to UNSCRs
1737 (2006), 1747 (2007), 1803 (2008),
or 1929 (2010), or any other resolution
adopted by the Security Council that
imposes sanctions with respect to Iran;
(3) engages in money laundering to
carry out an activity described in (1) or
(2); (4) facilitates efforts by the Central
Bank of Iran or any other Iranian
financial institution to carry out an
activity described in (1) or (2); or (5)
facilitates a significant transaction or
transactions or provides significant
financial services for (i) the IRGC or any
of its agents or affiliates whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et
seq.) (‘‘IEEPA’’), or (ii) a financial
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institution whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to
IEEPA in connection with Iran’s
proliferation of WMD or delivery
systems for WMD, or Iran’s support for
international terrorism. Section 104(c)
of CISADA further states that the civil
and criminal penalties provided for in
IEEPA shall apply to a person that
violates the regulations prescribed
under that section.
Section 104(d) of CISADA requires
the Secretary of the Treasury, not later
than 90 days after the date of CISADA’s
enactment, to prescribe regulations to
prohibit any person owned or controlled
by a U.S. financial institution from
knowingly engaging in transactions with
or benefitting the IRGC or any of its
agents or affiliates whose property or
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to IEEPA. Section 104(d)
further states that the civil penalties
provided for in IEEPA shall apply to a
U.S. financial institution if a person
owned or controlled by the U.S.
financial institution violates the
regulations prescribed under that
section and the U.S. financial institution
knew or should have known of that
violation.
Section 104(h) of CISADA requires
the Secretary of the Treasury to consult
with the Secretary of State in
implementing sections 104(c) and
104(d) of CISADA and the regulations
prescribed under these subsections.
Pursuant to section 104(h) of CISADA,
the Secretary of the Treasury also may
consult in his sole discretion with such
other agencies and departments and
such other interested parties as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
To implement these provisions of
CISADA, OFAC is promulgating the
Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations,
31 CFR part 561 (the ‘‘Regulations’’).
Section 561.101 of the Regulations
clarifies the relation of this part to other
laws and regulations. Section 561.201 of
the Regulations implements subsection
104(c) of CISADA, while § 561.202 of
the Regulations implements subsection
104(d) of CISADA. The names of foreign
financial institutions that are found by
the Secretary of the Treasury to
knowingly engage in the activities
described in § 561.201(a) of the
Regulations, and for which U.S.
financial institutions may not open or
maintain correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts in the United
States, will be published in the Federal
Register and listed in appendix A to
part 561.
Subpart C of the Regulations defines
key terms used throughout the
Regulations, and subpart D contains
interpretive sections regarding the
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Regulations. Section 561.404 of subpart
D of the Regulations sets forth the types
of factors that, as a general matter, the
Secretary of the Treasury will consider
in determining, for purposes of
paragraph (a)(5) of § 561.201, whether
transactions or financial services are
significant. Subpart E of the Regulations
contains certain licensing provisions,
including a general license in § 561.504
authorizing transactions related to
winding down and closing a
correspondent account or a payablethrough account.
Subpart F of the Regulations refers to
subpart C of part 501 for applicable
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. Subpart G of the
Regulations describes the civil and
criminal penalties applicable to
violations of the Regulations, as well as
the procedures governing the potential
imposition of a civil monetary penalty.
Subpart G also refers to appendix A of
part 501 for a more complete
description of these procedures.
Subpart H of the Regulations refers to
subpart E of part 501 for applicable
provisions relating to administrative
procedures and contains a delegation of
authority by the Secretary of the
Treasury. Subpart I of the Regulations
sets forth a Paperwork Reduction Act
notice.
Public Participation
Because the Regulations involve a
foreign affairs function, the provisions
of Executive Order 12866 and the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553) requiring notice of proposed
rulemaking, opportunity for public
participation, and delay in effective date
are inapplicable. Because no notice of
proposed rulemaking is required for this
rule, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601–612) does not apply.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collections of information related
to the Regulations are contained in 31
CFR part 501 (the ‘‘Reporting,
Procedures and Penalties Regulations’’).
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507), those
collections of information have been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget under control number 1505–
0164. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid control number.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 561
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Brokers,
Foreign Trade, Investments, Loans,
Securities, Iran.
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For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control adds part 561 to 31 CFR chapter
V to read as follows:
■
PART 561—IRANIAN FINANCIAL
SANCTIONS REGULATIONS
Subpart A—Relation of This Part to Other
Laws and Regulations
Sec.
561.101 Relation of this part to other laws
and regulations.
Subpart B—Prohibitions
561.201 Prohibitions with respect to
correspondent accounts or payablethrough accounts of certain foreign
financial institutions.
561.202 Prohibitions on persons owned or
controlled by U.S. financial institutions.
Subpart C—General Definitions
561.301 Effective date.
561.302 UNSC Resolution 1737.
561.303 UNSC Resolution 1747.
561.304 UNSC Resolution 1803.
561.305 UNSC Resolution 1929.
561.306 Correspondent account.
561.307 Payable-through account.
561.308 Foreign financial institution.
561.309 U.S. financial institution.
561.310 Money laundering.
561.311 Agent.
561.312 Act of international terrorism.
561.313 Financial services.
561.314 Knowingly.
561.315 Person.
561.316 Entity.
561.317 Money service businesses.
Subpart D—Interpretations
561.401 Reference to amended sections.
561.402 Effect of amendment.
561.403 Facilitation of certain efforts,
activities, or transactions by foreign
financial institutions.
561.404 Significant transaction or
transactions; significant financial
services.
561.405 Entities owned by a person whose
property and interests in property are
blocked.
Subpart E—Licenses, Authorizations, and
Statements of Licensing Policy
561.501 General and specific licensing
procedures.
561.502 Effect of license or authorization.
561.503 Exclusion from licenses.
561.504 Transactions related to closing a
correspondent account or payablethrough account.
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Subpart F—Reports
561.601 Records and reports.
Subpart G—Penalties
561.701 Penalties.
561.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
561.703 Penalty imposition.
561.704 Administrative collection; referral
to United States Department of Justice.
Subpart H—Procedures
561.801 Procedures.
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561.802 Delegation by the Secretary of the
Treasury.
561.803 Consultations.
Subpart I—Paperwork Reduction Act
561.901 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
Appendix A to Part 561—[Reserved]
Authority: 3 U.S.C. 301; 31 U.S.C. 321(b);
Pub. L. 101–410, 104 Stat. 890 (28 U.S.C.
2461 note); Pub. L. 111–195, 124 Stat. 1312.
Subpart A—Relation of This Part to
Other Laws and Regulations
§ 561.101 Relation of this part to other
laws and regulations.
This part is separate from, and
independent of, the other parts of this
chapter, with the exception of part 501
of this chapter, the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements and license
application and other procedures of
which apply to this part. Actions taken
pursuant to part 501 of this chapter with
respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part or the conditions imposed
pursuant to this part are considered
actions taken pursuant to this part.
Differing foreign policy and national
security circumstances may result in
differing interpretations of similar
language among the parts of this
chapter. No license or authorization
contained in or issued pursuant to those
other parts authorizes any transaction
prohibited by this part. No license or
authorization contained in or issued
pursuant to any other provision of law
or regulation authorizes any transaction
prohibited by this part. No license or
authorization contained in or issued
pursuant to this part relieves the
involved parties from complying with
any other applicable laws or regulations.
Subpart B—Prohibitions
§ 561.201 Prohibitions or strict conditions
with respect to correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts of certain foreign
financial institutions identified by the
Secretary of the Treasury.
Upon a finding by the Secretary of the
Treasury that a foreign financial
institution knowingly engages in one or
more of the activities described in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(5) of this
section, consistent with the Secretary of
the Treasury’s authorities under the
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Divestment Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–195), either the
Secretary of the Treasury will issue an
order or regulation imposing one or
more strict conditions, as set forth in
paragraph (b) of this section, on the
opening or maintaining of a
correspondent account or a payablethrough account in the United States for
that foreign financial institution, or, as
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set forth in paragraph (c) of this section,
the name of that foreign financial
institution will be added to Appendix A
to this part, and a U.S. financial
institution shall be prohibited from
opening or maintaining a correspondent
account or a payable-through account in
the United States for that foreign
financial institution.
(a) A foreign financial institution
engages in an activity described in this
paragraph if, in any location or
currency, the foreign financial
institution knowingly:
(1) Facilitates the efforts of the
Government of Iran (including efforts of
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps or any of its agents or affiliates)—
(i) To acquire or develop weapons of
mass destruction or delivery systems for
weapons of mass destruction; or
(ii) To provide support for
organizations designated as foreign
terrorist organizations under section
219(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8 USC 1189(a)) or
support for acts of international
terrorism, as defined in section 561.312
of this part;
(2) Facilitates the activities of a
person subject to financial sanctions
pursuant to United Nations Security
Council Resolutions 1737, 1747, 1803,
or 1929, or any other resolution adopted
by the Security Council that imposes
sanctions with respect to Iran;
Note to paragraph (a)(2) of § 561.201:
Persons subject to financial sanctions
pursuant to the United Nations Security
Council resolutions listed in paragraph (a)(2)
of § 561.201 include individuals and entities
listed in the Annex to UNSC Resolution
1737, Annex I of UNSC Resolution 1747,
Annexes I and III of UNSC Resolution 1803,
and Annexes I, II, and III of UNSC Resolution
1929; and individuals and entities designated
by the Security Council or by the Committee
established pursuant to UNSC Resolution
1737 (the ‘‘Committee’’) as being engaged in,
directly associated with or providing support
for Iran’s proliferation sensitive nuclear
activities, or the development of nuclear
weapon delivery systems; and individuals
and entities acting on behalf of or at the
direction of those so listed or designated; and
entities owned or controlled by those so
listed or designated; and individuals and
entities determined by the Security Council
or the Committee to have assisted listed or
designated individuals or entities in evading
sanctions of, or in violating the provisions of,
UNSC Resolutions 1737, 1747, 1803, or 1929.
(3) Engages in money laundering to
carry out an activity described in
paragraphs (a)(1) or (a)(2) of this section;
(4) Facilitates efforts by the Central
Bank of Iran or any other Iranian
financial institution to carry out an
activity described in paragraphs (a)(1) or
(a)(2) of this section; or
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(5) Facilitates a significant transaction
or transactions or provides significant
financial services for—
(i) Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps or any of its agents or affiliates
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.); or
(ii) A financial institution whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to parts 544 or 594 of
this chapter in connection with Iran’s
proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction or delivery systems for
weapons of mass destruction or Iran’s
support for international terrorism.
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Note to paragraph (a)(5) of § 561.201: The
names of persons whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to
the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.) are
published on the Office of Foreign Assets
Control’s Specially Designated Nationals and
Blocked Persons List (‘‘SDN’’ list) (which is
accessible via the Office of Foreign Assets
Control’s Web site), published in the Federal
Register, and incorporated into Appendix A
to this chapter. Agents or affiliates of Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (‘‘IRGC’’)
whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act are
identified by a special reference to the
‘‘IRGC’’ at the end of their entries on the SDN
list, in addition to the reference to the
regulatory part of this chapter pursuant to
which their property and interests in
property are blocked. For example, an
affiliate of the IRGC whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to
the Weapons of Mass Destruction
Proliferators Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR
part 544, will have the tag ‘‘[NPWMD][IRGC]’’
at the end of its entry on the SDN list.
Financial institutions whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to
parts 544 or 594 of this chapter in connection
with Iran’s proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction or delivery systems for weapons
of mass destruction or Iran’s support for
international terrorism also are identified by
tags which reference this part in addition to
part 544 or part 594, as the case may be,
located at the end of their entries on the SDN
list (e.g., [NPWMD][IFSR] or [SDGT][IFSR]).
OFAC’s electronic SDN list can be found at
the following URL: https://www.treas.gov/
offices/enforcement/ofac/sdn/sdnlist.txt. In
addition, see § 561.405 concerning entities
that may not be listed on the SDN list but
whose property and interests in property are
nevertheless blocked.
(b) The Secretary of the Treasury by
order or regulation may impose one or
more strict conditions on the opening or
maintaining by a U.S. financial
institution of a correspondent account
or a payable-through account in the
United States for a foreign financial
institution that the Secretary finds
engages in one or more of the activities
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described in paragraph (a) of this
section. The prohibition in paragraph (c)
of this section on the opening or
maintaining of a correspondent account
or a payable-through account in the
United States for a foreign financial
institution shall not apply if the
Secretary of the Treasury has imposed
one or more strict conditions pursuant
to this paragraph on the opening or
maintaining of a correspondent account
or payable-through account for that
foreign financial institution, and such
condition or conditions remain in effect.
Such conditions may include, but are
not limited to, the following:
(1) Prohibiting any provision of trade
finance through the correspondent
account or payable-through account of
the foreign financial institution;
(2) Restricting the transactions that
may be processed through the
correspondent account or payablethrough account of the foreign financial
institution to certain types of
transactions, such as personal
remittances;
(3) Placing monetary limits on the
transactions that may be processed
through the correspondent account or
payable-through account of the foreign
financial institution; or
(4) Requiring pre-approval from the
U.S. financial institution for all
transactions processed through the
correspondent account or payablethrough account of the foreign financial
institution.
Note to paragraph (b) of § 561.201: The
actual condition(s) to be imposed will be
specified upon the identification of the
foreign financial institution in the order or
regulation issued by the Secretary of the
Treasury.
(c) Except to the extent paragraph (b)
of this section applies, and except as
otherwise authorized pursuant to this
part, a U.S. financial institution shall
not open or maintain a correspondent
account or a payable-through account in
the United States for a foreign financial
institution that the Secretary of the
Treasury finds engages in one or more
of the activities described in paragraph
(a) of this section. The names of foreign
financial institutions that are found by
the Secretary of the Treasury to engage
in one or more of the activities
described in paragraph (a) of this
section, and for which U.S. financial
institutions may not open or maintain
correspondent accounts or payablethrough accounts as provided in this
paragraph, will be listed in Appendix A
to this part.
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49839
§ 561.202 Prohibitions on persons owned
or controlled by U.S. financial institutions.
Except as otherwise authorized
pursuant to this part, any person that is
owned or controlled by a U.S. financial
institution is prohibited from knowingly
engaging in any transaction with or
benefitting Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps or any of its agents or
affiliates whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.).
Note 1 to § 561.202: The names of persons
whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC
1701 et seq.) are published on the Office of
Foreign Assets Control’s Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons
List (‘‘SDN’’ list) (which is accessible via the
Office of Foreign Assets Control’s Web site),
published in the Federal Register, and
incorporated into Appendix A to this
chapter. Agents or affiliates of Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (‘‘IRGC’’) whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC
1701 et seq.) are identified by a special
reference to the ‘‘IRGC’’ at the end of their
entries on the SDN list, in addition to the
reference to the regulatory part of this
chapter pursuant to which their property and
interests in property are blocked. For
example, an affiliate of the IRGC whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the Weapons of Mass
Destruction Proliferators Sanctions
Regulations, 31 CFR part 544, will have the
tag ‘‘[NPWMD][IRGC]’’ at the end of its entry
on the SDN list. OFAC’s electronic SDN list
can be found at the following URL: https://
www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/sdn/
sdnlist.txt. In addition, see § 561.405
concerning entities that may not be listed on
the SDN list but whose property and interests
in property are nevertheless blocked.
Note 2 to § 561.202: A U.S. financial
institution is subject to the civil penalties
provided for in section 206(b) of the
International Emergency Economic Powers
Act (50 U.S.C. 1705(b)) if any person that it
owns or controls violates the prohibition set
forth in this section and the U.S. financial
institution knew or should have known of
such violation. See § 561.701(a)(2).
Subpart C–General Definitions
§ 561.301
Effective date.
(a) The effective date of a prohibition
or condition imposed pursuant to
§ 561.201 on the opening or maintaining
of a correspondent account or a payablethrough account in the United States by
a U.S. financial institution for a
particular foreign financial institution is
the earlier of the date the U.S. financial
institution receives actual or
constructive notice of such prohibition
or condition.
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(b) The effective date of the
prohibition contained in § 561.202 with
respect to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps and any of its agents or
affiliates whose property and interests
in property are blocked as of August 16,
2010 is August 16, 2010;
(c) The effective date of the
prohibition contained in § 561.202 with
respect to an agent or affiliate of Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
whose property and interests in
property become blocked after August
16, 2010 is the earlier of the date of
actual or constructive notice that such
person’s property and interests in
property are blocked.
§ 561.302
UNSC Resolution 1737.
The term UNSC Resolution 1737
means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1737, adopted December 23,
2006.
§ 561.303
UNSC Resolution 1747.
The term UNSC Resolution 1747
means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1747, adopted March 24,
2007.
§ 561.304
UNSC Resolution 1803.
The term UNSC Resolution 1803
means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1803, adopted March 3,
2008.
§ 561.305
UNSC Resolution 1929.
The term UNSC Resolution 1929
means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1929, adopted June 9, 2010.
§ 561.306
Correspondent account.
For purposes of this part, the term
correspondent account means an
account established by a U.S. financial
institution for a foreign financial
institution to receive deposits from, or
to make payments on behalf of, the
foreign financial institution, or to
handle other financial transactions
related to such foreign financial
institution.
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§ 561.307
Payable-through account.
For purposes of this part, the term
payable-through account means a
correspondent account maintained by a
U.S. financial institution for a foreign
financial institution by means of which
the foreign financial institution permits
its customers to engage, either directly
or through a subaccount, in banking
activities usual in connection with the
business of banking in the United
States.
§ 561.308
Foreign financial institution.
For purposes of this part, the term
foreign financial institution means any
foreign entity that is engaged in the
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business of accepting deposits, making,
granting, transferring, holding, or
brokering loans or credits, or purchasing
or selling foreign exchange, securities,
commodity futures or options, or
procuring purchasers and sellers
thereof, as principal or agent. It includes
but is not limited to depository
institutions, banks, savings banks,
money service businesses, trust
companies, securities brokers and
dealers, commodity futures and options
brokers and dealers, forward contract
and foreign exchange merchants,
securities and commodities exchanges,
clearing corporations, investment
companies, employee benefit plans, and
holding companies, affiliates, or
subsidiaries of any of the foregoing. The
term does not include the international
financial institutions identified in 22
U.S.C. 262r(c)(2), the International Fund
for Agricultural Development, or the
North American Development Bank.
§ 561.309
U.S. financial institution.
For purposes of this part, the term
U.S. financial institution means any
U.S. entity that is engaged in the
business of accepting deposits, making,
granting, transferring, holding, or
brokering loans or credits, or purchasing
or selling foreign exchange, securities,
commodity futures or options, or
procuring purchasers and sellers
thereof, as principal or agent. It includes
but is not limited to depository
institutions, banks, savings banks,
money service businesses, trust
companies, insurance companies,
securities brokers and dealers,
commodity futures and options brokers
and dealers, forward contract and
foreign exchange merchants, securities
and commodities exchanges, clearing
corporations, investment companies,
employee benefit plans, and U.S.
holding companies, U.S. affiliates, or
U.S. subsidiaries of any of the foregoing.
This term includes those branches,
offices, and agencies of foreign financial
institutions that are located in the
United States, but not such institutions’
foreign branches, offices, or agencies.
§ 561.310
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Agent.
For purposes of this part, the term
agent includes an entity established by
a person for purposes of conducting
transactions on behalf of the person in
order to conceal the identity of the
person.
§ 561.312
Act of international terrorism.
For purposes of this part, the term act
of international terrorism has the same
definition as that provided under
section 14 of the Iran Sanctions Act of
1996 (50 U.S.C. 1701 note). As of the
date of publication in the Federal
Register of the final rule adding this
part to 31 CFR chapter V, August 16,
2010, the term act of international
terrorism means an act which is violent
or dangerous to human life and that is
a violation of the criminal laws of the
United States or of any state or that
would be a criminal violation if
committed within the jurisdiction of the
United States or any state and which
appears to be intended to intimidate or
coerce a civilian population; to
influence the policy of a government by
intimidation or coercion; or to affect the
conduct of a government by
assassination or kidnapping.
§ 561.313
Financial services.
For purposes of paragraph (a)(5) of
§ 561.201, the term financial services
includes loans, transfers, accounts,
insurance, investments, securities,
guarantees, foreign exchange, letters of
credit, and commodity futures or
options.
§ 561.314
Knowingly.
For purposes of this part, the term
knowingly, with respect to conduct, a
circumstance, or a result, means that a
person has actual knowledge, or should
have known, of the conduct, the
circumstance, or the result.
§ 561.315
Person.
The term person means an individual
or entity.
§ 561.316
Entity.
The term entity means a partnership,
association, trust, joint venture,
corporation, or other organization.
§ 561.317
Money laundering.
For purposes of this part, the term
money laundering means engaging in
deceptive practices to obscure the
nature of transactions involving the
movement of illicit cash or illicit cash
equivalent proceeds into, out of, or
through a country, or into, out of, or
through a financial institution, such that
the transactions are made to appear
legitimate.
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§ 561.311
Money service businesses.
For purposes of this part, the term
money service businesses means any
agent, agency, branch, or office of any
person doing business, whether or not
on a regular basis or as an organized
business concern, in one or more of the
capacities listed in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(1)
through (uu)(5). The term does not
include a bank or a person registered
with, and regulated or examined by, the
Securities and Exchange Commission or
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the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
Subpart D—Interpretations
§ 561.401
Reference to amended sections.
Except as otherwise specified,
reference to any provision in or
appendix to this part or chapter or to
any regulation, ruling, order,
instruction, directive, or license issued
pursuant to this part refers to the same
as currently amended.
§ 561.402
Effect of amendment.
Unless otherwise specifically
provided, any amendment,
modification, or revocation of any
provision in or appendix to this part or
chapter or of any order, regulation,
ruling, instruction, or license issued by
the Office of Foreign Assets Control
does not affect any act done or omitted,
or any civil or criminal proceeding
commenced or pending, prior to such
amendment, modification, or
revocation. All penalties, forfeitures,
and liabilities under any such order,
regulation, ruling, instruction, or license
continue and may be enforced as if such
amendment, modification, or revocation
had not been made.
§ 561.403 Facilitation of certain efforts,
activities, or transactions by foreign
financial institutions.
For purposes of § 561.201, the term
facilitate used with respect to certain
efforts, activities, or transactions refers
to the provision of assistance by a
foreign financial institution for those
efforts, activities, or transactions,
including, but not limited to, the
provision of currency, financial
instruments, securities, or any other
transmission of value; purchasing;
selling; transporting; swapping;
brokering; financing; approving;
guaranteeing; or the provision of other
services of any kind; or the provision of
personnel; or the provision of software,
technology, or goods of any kind.
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§ 561.404 Significant transaction or
transactions; significant financial services.
In determining, for purposes of
paragraph (a)(5) of § 561.201, whether a
transaction is significant, whether
transactions are significant, or whether
financial services are significant, the
Secretary of the Treasury may consider
the totality of the facts and
circumstances. As a general matter, the
Secretary may consider some or all of
the following factors:
(a) Size, Number, and Frequency: The
size, number, and frequency of
transactions or financial services
performed over a period of time,
including whether the transactions or
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financial services are increasing or
decreasing over time and the rate of
increase or decrease.
(b) Nature: The nature of the
transaction(s) or financial services,
including the type, complexity, and
commercial purpose of the
transaction(s) or financial services.
(c) Level of Awareness; Pattern of
Conduct:
(1) Whether the transaction(s) or
financial service(s) are performed with
the involvement or approval of
management or only by clerical
personnel; and
(2) Whether the transaction(s) or
financial services are part of a pattern of
conduct or the result of a business
development strategy.
(d) Nexus: The proximity between the
party to the transaction or transactions
or the provider of the financial services
and a blocked person described in
paragraph (a)(5)(i) or (ii) of § 561.201.
For example, a transaction or financial
service in which a foreign financial
institution provides brokerage or
clearing services to such a blocked
person in a direct customer relationship
generally would be of greater
significance than a transaction or
financial service a foreign financial
institution provides to such a blocked
person in an indirect or tertiary
relationship.
(e) Impact: The impact of the
transaction(s) or financial services on
the objectives of the Comprehensive
Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and
Divestment Act of 2010, including:
(1) The economic or other benefit
conferred or attempted to be conferred
on a blocked person described in
paragraph (a)(5)(i) or (ii) of § 561.201;
(2) Whether and how the
transaction(s) or financial services
contribute to the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction or delivery
systems for such weapons, to support
for international terrorism, or to the
suppression of human rights; and
(3) Whether the transaction(s) or
financial services support humanitarian
activity or involve the payment of basic
expenses as specified in and authorized
pursuant to UNSC Resolution 1737 or
the payment of extraordinary expenses
that have been authorized by the
Sanctions Committee established
pursuant to UNSC Resolution 1737.
(f) Deceptive Practices: Whether the
transaction(s) or financial services
involve an attempt to obscure or conceal
the actual parties or true nature of the
transaction(s) or financial service(s).
(g) Other Relevant Factors: Such other
factors that the Secretary deems relevant
on a case-by-case basis in determining
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the significance of a transaction,
transactions, or financial services.
§ 561.405 Entities owned by a person
whose property and interests in property
are blocked.
A person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et
seq.) has an interest in all property and
interests in property of an entity in
which it owns, directly or indirectly, a
50 percent or greater interest. The
property and interests in property of
such an entity, therefore, are blocked,
and such an entity is a person whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), regardless of
whether the entity itself is listed in
Appendix A to this chapter.
Subpart E—Licenses, Authorizations,
and Statements of Licensing Policy
§ 561.501 General and specific licensing
procedures.
For provisions relating to licensing
procedures, see part 501, subpart E of
this chapter. Licensing actions taken
pursuant to part 501 of this chapter with
respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part or conditions imposed
pursuant to this part are considered
actions taken pursuant to this part.
§ 561.502 Effect of license or
authorization.
(a) No license or other authorization
contained in this part, or otherwise
issued by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control, authorizes or validates any
transaction effected prior to the issuance
of such license or other authorization,
unless specifically provided in such
license or authorization.
(b) No regulation, ruling, instruction,
or license authorizes any transaction
prohibited under this part unless the
regulation, ruling, instruction, or license
is issued by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control and specifically refers to this
part. No regulation, ruling, instruction,
or license referring to this part shall be
deemed to authorize any transaction
prohibited by any other part of this
chapter unless the regulation, ruling,
instruction, or license specifically refers
to such part.
(c) Any regulation, ruling, instruction,
or license authorizing any transaction
otherwise prohibited under this part has
the effect of removing a prohibition
contained in this part from the
transaction, but only to the extent
specifically stated by its terms. Unless
the regulation, ruling, instruction, or
license otherwise specifies, such an
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authorization does not create any right,
duty, obligation, claim, or interest in, or
with respect to, any property which
would not otherwise exist under
ordinary principles of law.
§ 561.503
Exclusion from licenses.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control
reserves the right to exclude any person,
property, or transaction from the
operation of any license or from the
privileges conferred by any license. The
Office of Foreign Assets Control also
reserves the right to restrict the
applicability of any license to particular
persons, property, transactions, or
classes thereof. Such actions are binding
upon actual or constructive notice of the
exclusions or restrictions.
§ 561.504 Transactions related to closing a
correspondent account or payable-through
account.
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property or interests in property, blocked
pursuant to any other part of this chapter in
the process of closing a correspondent
account or a payable-through account for a
foreign financial institution listed in
Appendix A to this part. See § 561.101.
(a) During the 10-day period
beginning on the effective date of the
prohibition in § 561.201(c) on the
opening or maintaining of a
correspondent account or a payablethrough account for a foreign financial
institution listed in Appendix A to this
part, U.S. financial institutions that
maintain correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts for the foreign
financial institution are authorized to:
(1) Process only those transactions
through the account, or permit the
foreign financial institution to execute
only those transactions through the
account, that are for the purpose of, and
necessary for, closing the account; and
(2) Transfer the funds remaining in
the correspondent account or the
payable-through account to an account
of the foreign financial institution
located outside of the United States and
close the correspondent account or the
payable-through account.
(b) Specific licenses may be issued on
a case-by-case basis to authorize
transactions by a U.S. financial
institution with respect to a
correspondent account or a payablethrough account maintained by the U.S.
financial institution for a foreign
financial institution listed in Appendix
A to this part that are outside the scope
of the transactions authorized in
paragraph (a) of this section and/or that
occur beyond the [10-day] period
authorized in that paragraph.
(c) Nothing in this section authorizes
the opening of a correspondent account
or payable-through account for a foreign
financial institution listed in Appendix
A to this part.
Note to § 561.504: This section does not
authorize a U.S. financial institution to
unblock property or interests in property, or
to engage in any transaction or dealing in
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Subpart F—Reports
§ 561.601
Records and reports.
For provisions relating to required
records and reports, see part 501,
subpart C, of this chapter.
Subpart G—Penalties
§ 561.701
Penalties.
(a) Civil Penalties. (1) As set forth in
section 104(c) of the Comprehensive
Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and
Divestment Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
195) (‘‘CISADA’’), a civil penalty not to
exceed the amount set forth in section
206(b) of the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (‘‘IEEPA’’)(50
U.S.C. 1705(b)) may be imposed on any
person who violates, attempts to violate,
conspires to violate, or causes a
violation of any order or regulation
issued pursuant to § 561.201(b) or of the
prohibition in § 561.201(c) or of any
license set forth in or issued pursuant to
this part concerning such order,
regulation, or prohibition.
(2) As set forth in section 104(d) of
CISADA, a civil penalty not to exceed
the amount set forth in section 206(b) of
IEEPA may be imposed on a U.S.
financial institution if:
(i) A person owned or controlled by
the U.S. financial institution violates,
attempts to violate, conspires to violate,
or causes a violation of the prohibition
in § 561.202 or of any order, regulation,
or license set forth in or issued pursuant
to this part concerning such prohibition;
and
(ii) The U.S. financial institution
knew or should have known that the
person violated, attempted to violate,
conspired to violate, or caused a
violation of such prohibition.
Note to paragraph (a) of § 561.701: As of
the date of publication in the Federal
Register of the final rule adding this part to
31 CFR chapter V, August 16, 2010, IEEPA
provides for a maximum civil penalty not to
exceed the greater of $250,000 or an amount
that is twice the amount of the transaction
that is the basis of the violation with respect
to which the penalty is imposed.
(b) Criminal Penalty. As set forth in
section 104(c) of CISADA, a person who
willfully commits, willfully attempts to
commit, or willfully conspires to
commit, or aids or abets in the
commission of a violation of any order
or regulation issued pursuant to
§ 561.201(b) or of the prohibition in
§ 561.201(c) shall, upon conviction, be
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fined not more than $1,000,000, or if a
natural person, be imprisoned for not
more than 20 years, or both.
(c) Adjustments to penalty amounts.
(1) The civil penalties provided in
IEEPA are subject to adjustment
pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties
Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Pub.
L. 101–410, as amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461
note).
(2) The criminal penalties provided in
IEEPA are subject to adjustment
pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(d) Attention is also directed to 18
U.S.C. 1001, which provides that
‘‘whoever, in any matter within the
jurisdiction of the executive, legislative,
or judicial branch of the Government of
the United States, knowingly and
willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up
by any trick, scheme, or device a
material fact; makes any materially
false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement
or representation; or makes or uses any
false writing or document knowing the
same to contain any materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent statement or
entry’’ shall be fined under title 18,
United States Code, imprisoned, or
both.
(e) Violations of this part may also be
subject to relevant provisions of other
applicable laws.
§ 561.702
Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
(a) When required. If the Office of
Foreign Assets Control has reason to
believe that there has occurred a
violation of any provision of this part or
a violation of the provisions of any
license, ruling, regulation, order,
direction, or instruction issued by or
pursuant to the direction or
authorization of the Secretary of the
Treasury pursuant to this part or
otherwise under IEEPA and determines
that a civil monetary penalty may be
warranted, the Office of Foreign Assets
Control may issue a Pre-Penalty Notice
informing the alleged violator of the
agency’s intent to impose a monetary
penalty. A Pre-Penalty Notice shall be in
writing. The Pre-Penalty Notice may be
issued whether or not another agency
has taken any action with respect to the
matter. For a description of the contents
of a Pre-Penalty Notice, see Appendix A
to part 501 of this chapter.
(b)(1) Right to respond. An alleged
violator has the right to respond to a
Pre-Penalty Notice by making a written
presentation to the Office of Foreign
Assets Control. For a description of the
information that should be included in
such a response, see Appendix A to part
501 of this chapter.
(2) Deadline for response. A response
to a Pre-Penalty Notice must be made
within 30 days of the date of service of
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the Pre-Penalty Notice. The failure to
submit a response within the applicable
time period set forth in this paragraph
(b) shall be deemed to be a waiver of the
right to respond.
(i) Computation of time for response.
A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice must
be postmarked or date-stamped by the
U.S. Postal Service (or foreign postal
service, if mailed abroad) or courier
service provider (if transmitted to the
Office of Foreign Assets Control by
courier) on or before the 30th day after
the postmark date on the envelope in
which the Pre-Penalty Notice was
mailed. If the Pre-Penalty Notice was
personally delivered by a non-U.S.
Postal Service agent authorized by the
Office of Foreign Assets Control, a
response must be postmarked or datestamped on or before the 30th day after
the date of delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If
a due date falls on a federal holiday or
weekend, that due date is extended to
include the following business day. Any
other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of the Office of Foreign
Assets Control, only upon specific
request to the Office of Foreign Assets
Control.
(3) Form and method of response. A
response to a Pre-Penalty Notice need
not be in any particular form, but it
must be typewritten and signed by the
alleged violator or a representative
thereof, must contain information
sufficient to indicate that it is in
response to the Pre-Penalty Notice, and
must include the Office of Foreign
Assets Control identification number
listed on the Pre-Penalty Notice. A copy
of the written response may be sent by
facsimile, but the original also must be
sent to the Office of Foreign Assets
Control Enforcement Penalties Division
by mail or courier and must be
postmarked or date-stamped in
accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(c) Settlement. Settlement discussion
may be initiated by the Office of Foreign
Assets Control, the alleged violator, or
the alleged violator’s authorized
representative. For a description of
practices with respect to settlement, see
Appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(d) Guidelines. Guidelines for the
imposition or settlement of civil
penalties by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control are contained in Appendix A to
part 501 of this chapter.
(e) Representation. A representative of
the alleged violator may act on behalf of
the alleged violator, but any oral
communication with the Office of
Foreign Assets Control prior to a written
submission regarding the specific
allegations contained in the Pre-Penalty
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Notice must be preceded by a written
letter of representation, unless the PrePenalty Notice was served upon the
alleged violator in care of the
representative.
§ 561.703
Penalty imposition.
If, after considering any timely
written response to the Pre-Penalty
Notice and any relevant facts, the Office
of Foreign Assets Control determines
that there was a violation by the alleged
violator named in the Pre-Penalty
Notice and that a civil monetary penalty
is appropriate, the Office of Foreign
Assets Control may issue a Penalty
Notice to the violator containing a
determination of the violation and the
imposition of the monetary penalty. For
additional details concerning issuance
of a Penalty Notice, see Appendix A to
part 501 of this chapter. The issuance of
the Penalty Notice shall constitute final
agency action. The violator has the right
to seek judicial review of that final
agency action in federal district court.
§ 561.704 Administrative collection;
referral to United States Department of
Justice.
In the event that the violator does not
pay the penalty imposed pursuant to
this part, the matter may be referred for
administrative collection measures by
the Department of the Treasury or to the
United States Department of Justice for
appropriate action to recover the
penalty in a civil suit in a federal
district court.
Subpart G—Procedures
§ 561.801
Any action that the Secretary of the
Treasury is authorized to take pursuant
to section 104(c), (d), or (i) of the
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Divestment Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–195), and any action
of the Secretary of the Treasury
described in this part, may be taken by
the Director of the Office of Foreign
Assets Control or by any other person to
whom the Secretary of the Treasury has
delegated authority so to act.
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Subpart I—Paperwork Reduction Act
§ 561.901
Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
For approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507) of information
collections relating to recordkeeping
and reporting requirements, licensing
procedures (including those pursuant to
statements of licensing policy), and
other procedures, see § 501.901 of this
chapter. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by OMB.
Appendix A to Part 561—[Reserved]
Dated: August 11, 2010.
John E. Smith,
Associate Director, Office of Foreign Assets
Control.
Approved: August 11, 2010.
Stuart A. Levey,
Under Secretary, Office of Terrorism and
Financial Intelligence, Department of the
Treasury.
BILLING CODE 4810–45–P
§ 561.802 Delegation by the Secretary of
the Treasury.
Frm 00031
Consultations.
In implementing section 104 of the
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Divestment Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–195) and this part, the
Secretary of the Treasury shall consult
with the Secretary of State and may, in
the sole discretion of the Secretary of
the Treasury, consult with such other
agencies and departments and such
other interested parties as the Secretary
considers appropriate.
[FR Doc. 2010–20238 Filed 8–13–10; 8:45 am]
Procedures.
For license application procedures
and procedures relating to amendments,
modifications, or revocations of
licenses; administrative decisions;
rulemaking; and requests for documents
pursuant to the Freedom of Information
and Privacy Acts (5 U.S.C. 552 and
552a), see part 501, subpart E, of this
chapter.
PO 00000
§ 561.803
49843
Sfmt 4700
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2010–0666]
RIN 1625–AA11
Regulated Navigation Area; Boom
Deployment Strategy Testing, Great
Bay, NH
Coast Guard, DHS.
Temporary interim rule with
request for comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is
temporarily establishing a regulated
navigation area (RNA) in navigable
waters near Great Bay, New Hampshire.
This temporary regulation is in effect
while the New Hampshire Department
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\16AUR1.SGM
16AUR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 157 (Monday, August 16, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 49836-49843]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-20238]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Part 561
Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations
AGENCY: Office of Foreign Assets Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets
Control (``OFAC'') is promulgating the Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations, to implement provisions of the Comprehensive Iran
Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010, which require
the Secretary of the Treasury to prescribe certain regulations. These
regulations also implement other related provisions of the
aforementioned legislation.
DATES: Effective date: August 16, 2010.
Comment date: You may submit comments on or before October 15,
2010.
ADDRESSES: These regulations are not subject to the provisions of
Executive Order 12866 and the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553) that require notice of proposed rulemaking, opportunity for public
participation, and a delayed effective date. Nevertheless, OFAC
welcomes the submission of comments on this final rule. Please note
that the submission of comments will not affect the final rule's
effective date, nor will OFAC be required to respond to the comments
submitted or to amend or republish this final rule. You may submit
comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Fax: Attn: Request for Comments (Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations) Office of Prgm Policy & Implementation, 202/622-1657.
Mail: Attn: Request for Comments (Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations): Office of Prgm Policy & Implementation, Office of Foreign
Assets Control, Department of the Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20220.
Instructions: All submissions received must be in writing and
include the agency name and the Federal Register Doc. Number that
appears at the end of this document. OFAC will not accept comments
accompanied by a request that all or a part of the submission be
treated confidentially because of its business proprietary nature or
for any other reason. Comments received will be made available to the
public via regulations.gov or upon request, without change and
including any personal information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Assistant Director for Compliance,
Outreach & Implementation, tel.: 202/622-2490, Assistant Director for
Licensing, tel.: 202/622-2480, Assistant Director for Policy, tel.:
202/622-4855, Office of Foreign Assets Control, or Chief Counsel
(Foreign Assets Control), tel.: 202/622-2410, Office of the General
Counsel, Department of the Treasury (not toll free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document and additional information concerning OFAC are
available from OFAC's Web site (https://www.treas.gov/ofac). Certain
general information pertaining to OFAC's sanctions programs also is
available via facsimile through a 24-hour fax-on-demand service, tel.:
202/622-0077.
Background
On July 1, 2010, the President signed into law the Comprehensive
Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (Pub. L.
111-195) (``CISADA''). In signing CISADA, the President stated that
this act builds upon the recently adopted United Nations Security
Council Resolution (``UNSCR'') 1929 (2010) and its strong foundation
for new multilateral sanctions and provides a powerful tool against
Iran's development of nuclear weapons and support of terrorism. The
President pointed out that the Government of Iran, for years, has
violated its commitments under the NPT and defied United Nations
Security Council resolutions calling on Iran to cease its
proliferation-related activities and imposing sanctions for Iran's
failure to do so.
The President went on to describe UNSCR 1929 as providing the
toughest
[[Page 49837]]
and most comprehensive multilateral sanctions against the Government of
Iran to date. UNSCR 1929, among other things, calls upon States to
prohibit in their territories the opening of new branches,
subsidiaries, or representative offices of Iranian banks; to prohibit
Iranian banks from establishing or maintaining correspondent
relationships with banks in their jurisdiction; and to prevent the
provision of financial services, including insurance or re-insurance,
if they have reasonable grounds to believe that these activities could
contribute to Iran's proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities or the
development of nuclear weapon delivery systems. CISADA builds upon
UNSCR 1929 by strengthening existing sanctions under the Iran Sanctions
Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-172, 50 U.S.C. 1701 note) and adding new
mandatory sanctions on foreign financial institutions that facilitate
Iran's proliferation-related activities or support for terrorism or
that do significant business with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (``IRGC'') or certain other blocked persons.
Specifically, section 104(c) of CISADA requires the Secretary of
the Treasury, not later than 90 days after the date of CISADA's
enactment, to prescribe regulations to prohibit, or impose strict
conditions on, the opening or maintaining in the United States of a
correspondent account or a payable-through account for a foreign
financial institution that the Secretary finds knowingly: (1)
Facilitates the efforts of the Government of Iran, including the IRGC
or its agents or affiliates, to acquire or develop weapons of mass
destruction (``WMD'') or delivery systems for WMD or to provide support
for foreign terrorist organizations or acts of international terrorism;
(2) facilitates the activities of a person subject to financial
sanctions pursuant to UNSCRs 1737 (2006), 1747 (2007), 1803 (2008), or
1929 (2010), or any other resolution adopted by the Security Council
that imposes sanctions with respect to Iran; (3) engages in money
laundering to carry out an activity described in (1) or (2); (4)
facilitates efforts by the Central Bank of Iran or any other Iranian
financial institution to carry out an activity described in (1) or (2);
or (5) facilitates a significant transaction or transactions or
provides significant financial services for (i) the IRGC or any of its
agents or affiliates whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) (``IEEPA''), or (ii) a financial institution whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to IEEPA in
connection with Iran's proliferation of WMD or delivery systems for
WMD, or Iran's support for international terrorism. Section 104(c) of
CISADA further states that the civil and criminal penalties provided
for in IEEPA shall apply to a person that violates the regulations
prescribed under that section.
Section 104(d) of CISADA requires the Secretary of the Treasury,
not later than 90 days after the date of CISADA's enactment, to
prescribe regulations to prohibit any person owned or controlled by a
U.S. financial institution from knowingly engaging in transactions with
or benefitting the IRGC or any of its agents or affiliates whose
property or interests in property are blocked pursuant to IEEPA.
Section 104(d) further states that the civil penalties provided for in
IEEPA shall apply to a U.S. financial institution if a person owned or
controlled by the U.S. financial institution violates the regulations
prescribed under that section and the U.S. financial institution knew
or should have known of that violation.
Section 104(h) of CISADA requires the Secretary of the Treasury to
consult with the Secretary of State in implementing sections 104(c) and
104(d) of CISADA and the regulations prescribed under these
subsections. Pursuant to section 104(h) of CISADA, the Secretary of the
Treasury also may consult in his sole discretion with such other
agencies and departments and such other interested parties as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
To implement these provisions of CISADA, OFAC is promulgating the
Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 561 (the
``Regulations'').
Section 561.101 of the Regulations clarifies the relation of this
part to other laws and regulations. Section 561.201 of the Regulations
implements subsection 104(c) of CISADA, while Sec. 561.202 of the
Regulations implements subsection 104(d) of CISADA. The names of
foreign financial institutions that are found by the Secretary of the
Treasury to knowingly engage in the activities described in Sec.
561.201(a) of the Regulations, and for which U.S. financial
institutions may not open or maintain correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts in the United States, will be published in the
Federal Register and listed in appendix A to part 561.
Subpart C of the Regulations defines key terms used throughout the
Regulations, and subpart D contains interpretive sections regarding the
Regulations. Section 561.404 of subpart D of the Regulations sets forth
the types of factors that, as a general matter, the Secretary of the
Treasury will consider in determining, for purposes of paragraph (a)(5)
of Sec. 561.201, whether transactions or financial services are
significant. Subpart E of the Regulations contains certain licensing
provisions, including a general license in Sec. 561.504 authorizing
transactions related to winding down and closing a correspondent
account or a payable-through account.
Subpart F of the Regulations refers to subpart C of part 501 for
applicable recordkeeping and reporting requirements. Subpart G of the
Regulations describes the civil and criminal penalties applicable to
violations of the Regulations, as well as the procedures governing the
potential imposition of a civil monetary penalty. Subpart G also refers
to appendix A of part 501 for a more complete description of these
procedures.
Subpart H of the Regulations refers to subpart E of part 501 for
applicable provisions relating to administrative procedures and
contains a delegation of authority by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Subpart I of the Regulations sets forth a Paperwork Reduction Act
notice.
Public Participation
Because the Regulations involve a foreign affairs function, the
provisions of Executive Order 12866 and the Administrative Procedure
Act (5 U.S.C. 553) requiring notice of proposed rulemaking, opportunity
for public participation, and delay in effective date are inapplicable.
Because no notice of proposed rulemaking is required for this rule, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612) does not apply.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collections of information related to the Regulations are
contained in 31 CFR part 501 (the ``Reporting, Procedures and Penalties
Regulations''). Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507), those collections of information have been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget under control number 1505-0164. An
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of
information displays a valid control number.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 561
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, Banking, Brokers,
Foreign Trade, Investments, Loans, Securities, Iran.
[[Page 49838]]
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of the
Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control adds part 561 to 31 CFR
chapter V to read as follows:
PART 561--IRANIAN FINANCIAL SANCTIONS REGULATIONS
Subpart A--Relation of This Part to Other Laws and Regulations
Sec.
561.101 Relation of this part to other laws and regulations.
Subpart B--Prohibitions
561.201 Prohibitions with respect to correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts of certain foreign financial institutions.
561.202 Prohibitions on persons owned or controlled by U.S.
financial institutions.
Subpart C--General Definitions
561.301 Effective date.
561.302 UNSC Resolution 1737.
561.303 UNSC Resolution 1747.
561.304 UNSC Resolution 1803.
561.305 UNSC Resolution 1929.
561.306 Correspondent account.
561.307 Payable-through account.
561.308 Foreign financial institution.
561.309 U.S. financial institution.
561.310 Money laundering.
561.311 Agent.
561.312 Act of international terrorism.
561.313 Financial services.
561.314 Knowingly.
561.315 Person.
561.316 Entity.
561.317 Money service businesses.
Subpart D--Interpretations
561.401 Reference to amended sections.
561.402 Effect of amendment.
561.403 Facilitation of certain efforts, activities, or transactions
by foreign financial institutions.
561.404 Significant transaction or transactions; significant
financial services.
561.405 Entities owned by a person whose property and interests in
property are blocked.
Subpart E--Licenses, Authorizations, and Statements of Licensing Policy
561.501 General and specific licensing procedures.
561.502 Effect of license or authorization.
561.503 Exclusion from licenses.
561.504 Transactions related to closing a correspondent account or
payable-through account.
Subpart F--Reports
561.601 Records and reports.
Subpart G--Penalties
561.701 Penalties.
561.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
561.703 Penalty imposition.
561.704 Administrative collection; referral to United States
Department of Justice.
Subpart H--Procedures
561.801 Procedures.
561.802 Delegation by the Secretary of the Treasury.
561.803 Consultations.
Subpart I--Paperwork Reduction Act
561.901 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
Appendix A to Part 561--[Reserved]
Authority: 3 U.S.C. 301; 31 U.S.C. 321(b); Pub. L. 101-410, 104
Stat. 890 (28 U.S.C. 2461 note); Pub. L. 111-195, 124 Stat. 1312.
Subpart A--Relation of This Part to Other Laws and Regulations
Sec. 561.101 Relation of this part to other laws and regulations.
This part is separate from, and independent of, the other parts of
this chapter, with the exception of part 501 of this chapter, the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements and license application and
other procedures of which apply to this part. Actions taken pursuant to
part 501 of this chapter with respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part or the conditions imposed pursuant to this part are
considered actions taken pursuant to this part. Differing foreign
policy and national security circumstances may result in differing
interpretations of similar language among the parts of this chapter. No
license or authorization contained in or issued pursuant to those other
parts authorizes any transaction prohibited by this part. No license or
authorization contained in or issued pursuant to any other provision of
law or regulation authorizes any transaction prohibited by this part.
No license or authorization contained in or issued pursuant to this
part relieves the involved parties from complying with any other
applicable laws or regulations.
Subpart B--Prohibitions
Sec. 561.201 Prohibitions or strict conditions with respect to
correspondent accounts or payable-through accounts of certain foreign
financial institutions identified by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Upon a finding by the Secretary of the Treasury that a foreign
financial institution knowingly engages in one or more of the
activities described in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(5) of this
section, consistent with the Secretary of the Treasury's authorities
under the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment
Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-195), either the Secretary of the Treasury
will issue an order or regulation imposing one or more strict
conditions, as set forth in paragraph (b) of this section, on the
opening or maintaining of a correspondent account or a payable-through
account in the United States for that foreign financial institution,
or, as set forth in paragraph (c) of this section, the name of that
foreign financial institution will be added to Appendix A to this part,
and a U.S. financial institution shall be prohibited from opening or
maintaining a correspondent account or a payable-through account in the
United States for that foreign financial institution.
(a) A foreign financial institution engages in an activity
described in this paragraph if, in any location or currency, the
foreign financial institution knowingly:
(1) Facilitates the efforts of the Government of Iran (including
efforts of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or any of its
agents or affiliates)--
(i) To acquire or develop weapons of mass destruction or delivery
systems for weapons of mass destruction; or
(ii) To provide support for organizations designated as foreign
terrorist organizations under section 219(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8 USC 1189(a)) or support for acts of international
terrorism, as defined in section 561.312 of this part;
(2) Facilitates the activities of a person subject to financial
sanctions pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1737,
1747, 1803, or 1929, or any other resolution adopted by the Security
Council that imposes sanctions with respect to Iran;
Note to paragraph (a)(2) of Sec. 561.201: Persons subject to
financial sanctions pursuant to the United Nations Security Council
resolutions listed in paragraph (a)(2) of Sec. 561.201 include
individuals and entities listed in the Annex to UNSC Resolution
1737, Annex I of UNSC Resolution 1747, Annexes I and III of UNSC
Resolution 1803, and Annexes I, II, and III of UNSC Resolution 1929;
and individuals and entities designated by the Security Council or
by the Committee established pursuant to UNSC Resolution 1737 (the
``Committee'') as being engaged in, directly associated with or
providing support for Iran's proliferation sensitive nuclear
activities, or the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems;
and individuals and entities acting on behalf of or at the direction
of those so listed or designated; and entities owned or controlled
by those so listed or designated; and individuals and entities
determined by the Security Council or the Committee to have assisted
listed or designated individuals or entities in evading sanctions
of, or in violating the provisions of, UNSC Resolutions 1737, 1747,
1803, or 1929.
(3) Engages in money laundering to carry out an activity described
in paragraphs (a)(1) or (a)(2) of this section;
(4) Facilitates efforts by the Central Bank of Iran or any other
Iranian financial institution to carry out an activity described in
paragraphs (a)(1) or (a)(2) of this section; or
[[Page 49839]]
(5) Facilitates a significant transaction or transactions or
provides significant financial services for--
(i) Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or any of its agents
or affiliates whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC
1701 et seq.); or
(ii) A financial institution whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to parts 544 or 594 of this chapter in
connection with Iran's proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or
delivery systems for weapons of mass destruction or Iran's support for
international terrorism.
Note to paragraph (a)(5) of Sec. 561.201: The names of persons
whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.)
are published on the Office of Foreign Assets Control's Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (``SDN'' list) (which
is accessible via the Office of Foreign Assets Control's Web site),
published in the Federal Register, and incorporated into Appendix A
to this chapter. Agents or affiliates of Iran's Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (``IRGC'') whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act are identified by a special reference to the
``IRGC'' at the end of their entries on the SDN list, in addition to
the reference to the regulatory part of this chapter pursuant to
which their property and interests in property are blocked. For
example, an affiliate of the IRGC whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to the Weapons of Mass Destruction
Proliferators Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 544, will have the
tag ``[NPWMD][IRGC]'' at the end of its entry on the SDN list.
Financial institutions whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to parts 544 or 594 of this chapter in connection
with Iran's proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or delivery
systems for weapons of mass destruction or Iran's support for
international terrorism also are identified by tags which reference
this part in addition to part 544 or part 594, as the case may be,
located at the end of their entries on the SDN list (e.g.,
[NPWMD][IFSR] or [SDGT][IFSR]). OFAC's electronic SDN list can be
found at the following URL: https://www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/sdn/sdnlist.txt. In addition, see Sec. 561.405
concerning entities that may not be listed on the SDN list but whose
property and interests in property are nevertheless blocked.
(b) The Secretary of the Treasury by order or regulation may impose
one or more strict conditions on the opening or maintaining by a U.S.
financial institution of a correspondent account or a payable-through
account in the United States for a foreign financial institution that
the Secretary finds engages in one or more of the activities described
in paragraph (a) of this section. The prohibition in paragraph (c) of
this section on the opening or maintaining of a correspondent account
or a payable-through account in the United States for a foreign
financial institution shall not apply if the Secretary of the Treasury
has imposed one or more strict conditions pursuant to this paragraph on
the opening or maintaining of a correspondent account or payable-
through account for that foreign financial institution, and such
condition or conditions remain in effect. Such conditions may include,
but are not limited to, the following:
(1) Prohibiting any provision of trade finance through the
correspondent account or payable-through account of the foreign
financial institution;
(2) Restricting the transactions that may be processed through the
correspondent account or payable-through account of the foreign
financial institution to certain types of transactions, such as
personal remittances;
(3) Placing monetary limits on the transactions that may be
processed through the correspondent account or payable-through account
of the foreign financial institution; or
(4) Requiring pre-approval from the U.S. financial institution for
all transactions processed through the correspondent account or
payable-through account of the foreign financial institution.
Note to paragraph (b) of Sec. 561.201: The actual condition(s)
to be imposed will be specified upon the identification of the
foreign financial institution in the order or regulation issued by
the Secretary of the Treasury.
(c) Except to the extent paragraph (b) of this section applies, and
except as otherwise authorized pursuant to this part, a U.S. financial
institution shall not open or maintain a correspondent account or a
payable-through account in the United States for a foreign financial
institution that the Secretary of the Treasury finds engages in one or
more of the activities described in paragraph (a) of this section. The
names of foreign financial institutions that are found by the Secretary
of the Treasury to engage in one or more of the activities described in
paragraph (a) of this section, and for which U.S. financial
institutions may not open or maintain correspondent accounts or
payable-through accounts as provided in this paragraph, will be listed
in Appendix A to this part.
Sec. 561.202 Prohibitions on persons owned or controlled by U.S.
financial institutions.
Except as otherwise authorized pursuant to this part, any person
that is owned or controlled by a U.S. financial institution is
prohibited from knowingly engaging in any transaction with or
benefitting Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or any of its
agents or affiliates whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
USC 1701 et seq.).
Note 1 to Sec. 561.202: The names of persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.) are published on
the Office of Foreign Assets Control's Specially Designated
Nationals and Blocked Persons List (``SDN'' list) (which is
accessible via the Office of Foreign Assets Control's Web site),
published in the Federal Register, and incorporated into Appendix A
to this chapter. Agents or affiliates of Iran's Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (``IRGC'') whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 USC 1701 et seq.) are identified by a
special reference to the ``IRGC'' at the end of their entries on the
SDN list, in addition to the reference to the regulatory part of
this chapter pursuant to which their property and interests in
property are blocked. For example, an affiliate of the IRGC whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to the
Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators Sanctions Regulations, 31
CFR part 544, will have the tag ``[NPWMD][IRGC]'' at the end of its
entry on the SDN list. OFAC's electronic SDN list can be found at
the following URL: https://www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/sdn/sdnlist.txt. In addition, see Sec. 561.405 concerning entities
that may not be listed on the SDN list but whose property and
interests in property are nevertheless blocked.
Note 2 to Sec. 561.202: A U.S. financial institution is
subject to the civil penalties provided for in section 206(b) of the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1705(b)) if
any person that it owns or controls violates the prohibition set
forth in this section and the U.S. financial institution knew or
should have known of such violation. See Sec. 561.701(a)(2).
Subpart C-General Definitions
Sec. 561.301 Effective date.
(a) The effective date of a prohibition or condition imposed
pursuant to Sec. 561.201 on the opening or maintaining of a
correspondent account or a payable-through account in the United States
by a U.S. financial institution for a particular foreign financial
institution is the earlier of the date the U.S. financial institution
receives actual or constructive notice of such prohibition or
condition.
[[Page 49840]]
(b) The effective date of the prohibition contained in Sec.
561.202 with respect to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and
any of its agents or affiliates whose property and interests in
property are blocked as of August 16, 2010 is August 16, 2010;
(c) The effective date of the prohibition contained in Sec.
561.202 with respect to an agent or affiliate of Iran's Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps whose property and interests in property
become blocked after August 16, 2010 is the earlier of the date of
actual or constructive notice that such person's property and interests
in property are blocked.
Sec. 561.302 UNSC Resolution 1737.
The term UNSC Resolution 1737 means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1737, adopted December 23, 2006.
Sec. 561.303 UNSC Resolution 1747.
The term UNSC Resolution 1747 means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1747, adopted March 24, 2007.
Sec. 561.304 UNSC Resolution 1803.
The term UNSC Resolution 1803 means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1803, adopted March 3, 2008.
Sec. 561.305 UNSC Resolution 1929.
The term UNSC Resolution 1929 means United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1929, adopted June 9, 2010.
Sec. 561.306 Correspondent account.
For purposes of this part, the term correspondent account means an
account established by a U.S. financial institution for a foreign
financial institution to receive deposits from, or to make payments on
behalf of, the foreign financial institution, or to handle other
financial transactions related to such foreign financial institution.
Sec. 561.307 Payable-through account.
For purposes of this part, the term payable-through account means a
correspondent account maintained by a U.S. financial institution for a
foreign financial institution by means of which the foreign financial
institution permits its customers to engage, either directly or through
a subaccount, in banking activities usual in connection with the
business of banking in the United States.
Sec. 561.308 Foreign financial institution.
For purposes of this part, the term foreign financial institution
means any foreign entity that is engaged in the business of accepting
deposits, making, granting, transferring, holding, or brokering loans
or credits, or purchasing or selling foreign exchange, securities,
commodity futures or options, or procuring purchasers and sellers
thereof, as principal or agent. It includes but is not limited to
depository institutions, banks, savings banks, money service
businesses, trust companies, securities brokers and dealers, commodity
futures and options brokers and dealers, forward contract and foreign
exchange merchants, securities and commodities exchanges, clearing
corporations, investment companies, employee benefit plans, and holding
companies, affiliates, or subsidiaries of any of the foregoing. The
term does not include the international financial institutions
identified in 22 U.S.C. 262r(c)(2), the International Fund for
Agricultural Development, or the North American Development Bank.
Sec. 561.309 U.S. financial institution.
For purposes of this part, the term U.S. financial institution
means any U.S. entity that is engaged in the business of accepting
deposits, making, granting, transferring, holding, or brokering loans
or credits, or purchasing or selling foreign exchange, securities,
commodity futures or options, or procuring purchasers and sellers
thereof, as principal or agent. It includes but is not limited to
depository institutions, banks, savings banks, money service
businesses, trust companies, insurance companies, securities brokers
and dealers, commodity futures and options brokers and dealers, forward
contract and foreign exchange merchants, securities and commodities
exchanges, clearing corporations, investment companies, employee
benefit plans, and U.S. holding companies, U.S. affiliates, or U.S.
subsidiaries of any of the foregoing. This term includes those
branches, offices, and agencies of foreign financial institutions that
are located in the United States, but not such institutions' foreign
branches, offices, or agencies.
Sec. 561.310 Money laundering.
For purposes of this part, the term money laundering means engaging
in deceptive practices to obscure the nature of transactions involving
the movement of illicit cash or illicit cash equivalent proceeds into,
out of, or through a country, or into, out of, or through a financial
institution, such that the transactions are made to appear legitimate.
Sec. 561.311 Agent.
For purposes of this part, the term agent includes an entity
established by a person for purposes of conducting transactions on
behalf of the person in order to conceal the identity of the person.
Sec. 561.312 Act of international terrorism.
For purposes of this part, the term act of international terrorism
has the same definition as that provided under section 14 of the Iran
Sanctions Act of 1996 (50 U.S.C. 1701 note). As of the date of
publication in the Federal Register of the final rule adding this part
to 31 CFR chapter V, August 16, 2010, the term act of international
terrorism means an act which is violent or dangerous to human life and
that is a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any
state or that would be a criminal violation if committed within the
jurisdiction of the United States or any state and which appears to be
intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population; to influence
the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or to affect
the conduct of a government by assassination or kidnapping.
Sec. 561.313 Financial services.
For purposes of paragraph (a)(5) of Sec. 561.201, the term
financial services includes loans, transfers, accounts, insurance,
investments, securities, guarantees, foreign exchange, letters of
credit, and commodity futures or options.
Sec. 561.314 Knowingly.
For purposes of this part, the term knowingly, with respect to
conduct, a circumstance, or a result, means that a person has actual
knowledge, or should have known, of the conduct, the circumstance, or
the result.
Sec. 561.315 Person.
The term person means an individual or entity.
Sec. 561.316 Entity.
The term entity means a partnership, association, trust, joint
venture, corporation, or other organization.
Sec. 561.317 Money service businesses.
For purposes of this part, the term money service businesses means
any agent, agency, branch, or office of any person doing business,
whether or not on a regular basis or as an organized business concern,
in one or more of the capacities listed in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(1) through
(uu)(5). The term does not include a bank or a person registered with,
and regulated or examined by, the Securities and Exchange Commission or
[[Page 49841]]
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Subpart D--Interpretations
Sec. 561.401 Reference to amended sections.
Except as otherwise specified, reference to any provision in or
appendix to this part or chapter or to any regulation, ruling, order,
instruction, directive, or license issued pursuant to this part refers
to the same as currently amended.
Sec. 561.402 Effect of amendment.
Unless otherwise specifically provided, any amendment,
modification, or revocation of any provision in or appendix to this
part or chapter or of any order, regulation, ruling, instruction, or
license issued by the Office of Foreign Assets Control does not affect
any act done or omitted, or any civil or criminal proceeding commenced
or pending, prior to such amendment, modification, or revocation. All
penalties, forfeitures, and liabilities under any such order,
regulation, ruling, instruction, or license continue and may be
enforced as if such amendment, modification, or revocation had not been
made.
Sec. 561.403 Facilitation of certain efforts, activities, or
transactions by foreign financial institutions.
For purposes of Sec. 561.201, the term facilitate used with
respect to certain efforts, activities, or transactions refers to the
provision of assistance by a foreign financial institution for those
efforts, activities, or transactions, including, but not limited to,
the provision of currency, financial instruments, securities, or any
other transmission of value; purchasing; selling; transporting;
swapping; brokering; financing; approving; guaranteeing; or the
provision of other services of any kind; or the provision of personnel;
or the provision of software, technology, or goods of any kind.
Sec. 561.404 Significant transaction or transactions; significant
financial services.
In determining, for purposes of paragraph (a)(5) of Sec. 561.201,
whether a transaction is significant, whether transactions are
significant, or whether financial services are significant, the
Secretary of the Treasury may consider the totality of the facts and
circumstances. As a general matter, the Secretary may consider some or
all of the following factors:
(a) Size, Number, and Frequency: The size, number, and frequency of
transactions or financial services performed over a period of time,
including whether the transactions or financial services are increasing
or decreasing over time and the rate of increase or decrease.
(b) Nature: The nature of the transaction(s) or financial services,
including the type, complexity, and commercial purpose of the
transaction(s) or financial services.
(c) Level of Awareness; Pattern of Conduct:
(1) Whether the transaction(s) or financial service(s) are
performed with the involvement or approval of management or only by
clerical personnel; and
(2) Whether the transaction(s) or financial services are part of a
pattern of conduct or the result of a business development strategy.
(d) Nexus: The proximity between the party to the transaction or
transactions or the provider of the financial services and a blocked
person described in paragraph (a)(5)(i) or (ii) of Sec. 561.201. For
example, a transaction or financial service in which a foreign
financial institution provides brokerage or clearing services to such a
blocked person in a direct customer relationship generally would be of
greater significance than a transaction or financial service a foreign
financial institution provides to such a blocked person in an indirect
or tertiary relationship.
(e) Impact: The impact of the transaction(s) or financial services
on the objectives of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability,
and Divestment Act of 2010, including:
(1) The economic or other benefit conferred or attempted to be
conferred on a blocked person described in paragraph (a)(5)(i) or (ii)
of Sec. 561.201;
(2) Whether and how the transaction(s) or financial services
contribute to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or
delivery systems for such weapons, to support for international
terrorism, or to the suppression of human rights; and
(3) Whether the transaction(s) or financial services support
humanitarian activity or involve the payment of basic expenses as
specified in and authorized pursuant to UNSC Resolution 1737 or the
payment of extraordinary expenses that have been authorized by the
Sanctions Committee established pursuant to UNSC Resolution 1737.
(f) Deceptive Practices: Whether the transaction(s) or financial
services involve an attempt to obscure or conceal the actual parties or
true nature of the transaction(s) or financial service(s).
(g) Other Relevant Factors: Such other factors that the Secretary
deems relevant on a case-by-case basis in determining the significance
of a transaction, transactions, or financial services.
Sec. 561.405 Entities owned by a person whose property and interests
in property are blocked.
A person whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1701 et seq.) has an interest in all property and interests in property
of an entity in which it owns, directly or indirectly, a 50 percent or
greater interest. The property and interests in property of such an
entity, therefore, are blocked, and such an entity is a person whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.),
regardless of whether the entity itself is listed in Appendix A to this
chapter.
Subpart E--Licenses, Authorizations, and Statements of Licensing
Policy
Sec. 561.501 General and specific licensing procedures.
For provisions relating to licensing procedures, see part 501,
subpart E of this chapter. Licensing actions taken pursuant to part 501
of this chapter with respect to the prohibitions contained in this part
or conditions imposed pursuant to this part are considered actions
taken pursuant to this part.
Sec. 561.502 Effect of license or authorization.
(a) No license or other authorization contained in this part, or
otherwise issued by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, authorizes or
validates any transaction effected prior to the issuance of such
license or other authorization, unless specifically provided in such
license or authorization.
(b) No regulation, ruling, instruction, or license authorizes any
transaction prohibited under this part unless the regulation, ruling,
instruction, or license is issued by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control and specifically refers to this part. No regulation, ruling,
instruction, or license referring to this part shall be deemed to
authorize any transaction prohibited by any other part of this chapter
unless the regulation, ruling, instruction, or license specifically
refers to such part.
(c) Any regulation, ruling, instruction, or license authorizing any
transaction otherwise prohibited under this part has the effect of
removing a prohibition contained in this part from the transaction, but
only to the extent specifically stated by its terms. Unless the
regulation, ruling, instruction, or license otherwise specifies, such
an
[[Page 49842]]
authorization does not create any right, duty, obligation, claim, or
interest in, or with respect to, any property which would not otherwise
exist under ordinary principles of law.
Sec. 561.503 Exclusion from licenses.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control reserves the right to exclude
any person, property, or transaction from the operation of any license
or from the privileges conferred by any license. The Office of Foreign
Assets Control also reserves the right to restrict the applicability of
any license to particular persons, property, transactions, or classes
thereof. Such actions are binding upon actual or constructive notice of
the exclusions or restrictions.
Sec. 561.504 Transactions related to closing a correspondent account
or payable-through account.
(a) During the 10-day period beginning on the effective date of the
prohibition in Sec. 561.201(c) on the opening or maintaining of a
correspondent account or a payable-through account for a foreign
financial institution listed in Appendix A to this part, U.S. financial
institutions that maintain correspondent accounts or payable-through
accounts for the foreign financial institution are authorized to:
(1) Process only those transactions through the account, or permit
the foreign financial institution to execute only those transactions
through the account, that are for the purpose of, and necessary for,
closing the account; and
(2) Transfer the funds remaining in the correspondent account or
the payable-through account to an account of the foreign financial
institution located outside of the United States and close the
correspondent account or the payable-through account.
(b) Specific licenses may be issued on a case-by-case basis to
authorize transactions by a U.S. financial institution with respect to
a correspondent account or a payable-through account maintained by the
U.S. financial institution for a foreign financial institution listed
in Appendix A to this part that are outside the scope of the
transactions authorized in paragraph (a) of this section and/or that
occur beyond the [10-day] period authorized in that paragraph.
(c) Nothing in this section authorizes the opening of a
correspondent account or payable-through account for a foreign
financial institution listed in Appendix A to this part.
Note to Sec. 561.504: This section does not authorize a U.S.
financial institution to unblock property or interests in property,
or to engage in any transaction or dealing in property or interests
in property, blocked pursuant to any other part of this chapter in
the process of closing a correspondent account or a payable-through
account for a foreign financial institution listed in Appendix A to
this part. See Sec. 561.101.
Subpart F--Reports
Sec. 561.601 Records and reports.
For provisions relating to required records and reports, see part
501, subpart C, of this chapter.
Subpart G--Penalties
Sec. 561.701 Penalties.
(a) Civil Penalties. (1) As set forth in section 104(c) of the
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111-195) (``CISADA''), a civil penalty not to exceed the
amount set forth in section 206(b) of the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (``IEEPA'')(50 U.S.C. 1705(b)) may be imposed on
any person who violates, attempts to violate, conspires to violate, or
causes a violation of any order or regulation issued pursuant to Sec.
561.201(b) or of the prohibition in Sec. 561.201(c) or of any license
set forth in or issued pursuant to this part concerning such order,
regulation, or prohibition.
(2) As set forth in section 104(d) of CISADA, a civil penalty not
to exceed the amount set forth in section 206(b) of IEEPA may be
imposed on a U.S. financial institution if:
(i) A person owned or controlled by the U.S. financial institution
violates, attempts to violate, conspires to violate, or causes a
violation of the prohibition in Sec. 561.202 or of any order,
regulation, or license set forth in or issued pursuant to this part
concerning such prohibition; and
(ii) The U.S. financial institution knew or should have known that
the person violated, attempted to violate, conspired to violate, or
caused a violation of such prohibition.
Note to paragraph (a) of Sec. 561.701: As of the date of
publication in the Federal Register of the final rule adding this
part to 31 CFR chapter V, August 16, 2010, IEEPA provides for a
maximum civil penalty not to exceed the greater of $250,000 or an
amount that is twice the amount of the transaction that is the basis
of the violation with respect to which the penalty is imposed.
(b) Criminal Penalty. As set forth in section 104(c) of CISADA, a
person who willfully commits, willfully attempts to commit, or
willfully conspires to commit, or aids or abets in the commission of a
violation of any order or regulation issued pursuant to Sec.
561.201(b) or of the prohibition in Sec. 561.201(c) shall, upon
conviction, be fined not more than $1,000,000, or if a natural person,
be imprisoned for not more than 20 years, or both.
(c) Adjustments to penalty amounts. (1) The civil penalties
provided in IEEPA are subject to adjustment pursuant to the Federal
Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-410, as
amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461 note).
(2) The criminal penalties provided in IEEPA are subject to
adjustment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(d) Attention is also directed to 18 U.S.C. 1001, which provides
that ``whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of the executive,
legislative, or judicial branch of the Government of the United States,
knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick,
scheme, or device a material fact; makes any materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation; or makes or uses
any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any
materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry'' shall
be fined under title 18, United States Code, imprisoned, or both.
(e) Violations of this part may also be subject to relevant
provisions of other applicable laws.
Sec. 561.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
(a) When required. If the Office of Foreign Assets Control has
reason to believe that there has occurred a violation of any provision
of this part or a violation of the provisions of any license, ruling,
regulation, order, direction, or instruction issued by or pursuant to
the direction or authorization of the Secretary of the Treasury
pursuant to this part or otherwise under IEEPA and determines that a
civil monetary penalty may be warranted, the Office of Foreign Assets
Control may issue a Pre-Penalty Notice informing the alleged violator
of the agency's intent to impose a monetary penalty. A Pre-Penalty
Notice shall be in writing. The Pre-Penalty Notice may be issued
whether or not another agency has taken any action with respect to the
matter. For a description of the contents of a Pre-Penalty Notice, see
Appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(b)(1) Right to respond. An alleged violator has the right to
respond to a Pre-Penalty Notice by making a written presentation to the
Office of Foreign Assets Control. For a description of the information
that should be included in such a response, see Appendix A to part 501
of this chapter.
(2) Deadline for response. A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice must
be made within 30 days of the date of service of
[[Page 49843]]
the Pre-Penalty Notice. The failure to submit a response within the
applicable time period set forth in this paragraph (b) shall be deemed
to be a waiver of the right to respond.
(i) Computation of time for response. A response to a Pre-Penalty
Notice must be postmarked or date-stamped by the U.S. Postal Service
(or foreign postal service, if mailed abroad) or courier service
provider (if transmitted to the Office of Foreign Assets Control by
courier) on or before the 30th day after the postmark date on the
envelope in which the Pre-Penalty Notice was mailed. If the Pre-Penalty
Notice was personally delivered by a non-U.S. Postal Service agent
authorized by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, a response must be
postmarked or date-stamped on or before the 30th day after the date of
delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If a due date falls on a
federal holiday or weekend, that due date is extended to include the
following business day. Any other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, only upon
specific request to the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
(3) Form and method of response. A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice
need not be in any particular form, but it must be typewritten and
signed by the alleged violator or a representative thereof, must
contain information sufficient to indicate that it is in response to
the Pre-Penalty Notice, and must include the Office of Foreign Assets
Control identification number listed on the Pre-Penalty Notice. A copy
of the written response may be sent by facsimile, but the original also
must be sent to the Office of Foreign Assets Control Enforcement
Penalties Division by mail or courier and must be postmarked or date-
stamped in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Settlement. Settlement discussion may be initiated by the
Office of Foreign Assets Control, the alleged violator, or the alleged
violator's authorized representative. For a description of practices
with respect to settlement, see Appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(d) Guidelines. Guidelines for the imposition or settlement of
civil penalties by the Office of Foreign Assets Control are contained
in Appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(e) Representation. A representative of the alleged violator may
act on behalf of the alleged violator, but any oral communication with
the Office of Foreign Assets Control prior to a written submission
regarding the specific allegations contained in the Pre-Penalty Notice
must be preceded by a written letter of representation, unless the Pre-
Penalty Notice was served upon the alleged violator in care of the
representative.
Sec. 561.703 Penalty imposition.
If, after considering any timely written response to the Pre-
Penalty Notice and any relevant facts, the Office of Foreign Assets
Control determines that there was a violation by the alleged violator
named in the Pre-Penalty Notice and that a civil monetary penalty is
appropriate, the Office of Foreign Assets Control may issue a Penalty
Notice to the violator containing a determination of the violation and
the imposition of the monetary penalty. For additional details
concerning issuance of a Penalty Notice, see Appendix A to part 501 of
this chapter. The issuance of the Penalty Notice shall constitute final
agency action. The violator has the right to seek judicial review of
that final agency action in federal district court.
Sec. 561.704 Administrative collection; referral to United States
Department of Justice.
In the event that the violator does not pay the penalty imposed
pursuant to this part, the matter may be referred for administrative
collection measures by the Department of the Treasury or to the United
States Department of Justice for appropriate action to recover the
penalty in a civil suit in a federal district court.
Subpart G--Procedures
Sec. 561.801 Procedures.
For license application procedures and procedures relating to
amendments, modifications, or revocations of licenses; administrative
decisions; rulemaking; and requests for documents pursuant to the
Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts (5 U.S.C. 552 and 552a), see
part 501, subpart E, of this chapter.
Sec. 561.802 Delegation by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Any action that the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to take
pursuant to section 104(c), (d), or (i) of the Comprehensive Iran
Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-
195), and any action of the Secretary of the Treasury described in this
part, may be taken by the Director of the Office of Foreign Assets
Control or by any other person to whom the Secretary of the Treasury
has delegated authority so to act.
Sec. 561.803 Consultations.
In implementing section 104 of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-195) and this
part, the Secretary of the Treasury shall consult with the Secretary of
State and may, in the sole discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury,
consult with such other agencies and departments and such other
interested parties as the Secretary considers appropriate.
Subpart I--Paperwork Reduction Act
Sec. 561.901 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
For approval by the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507) of information
collections relating to recordkeeping and reporting requirements,
licensing procedures (including those pursuant to statements of
licensing policy), and other procedures, see Sec. 501.901 of this
chapter. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a valid control number assigned by OMB.
Appendix A to Part 561--[Reserved]
Dated: August 11, 2010.
John E. Smith,
Associate Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Approved: August 11, 2010.
Stuart A. Levey,
Under Secretary, Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence,
Department of the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2010-20238 Filed 8-13-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-45-P